Lucid Dream States

Hosted byGeorge Noory

Lucid Dream States

Highlights

  • Techniques and Heaven
  • The Dream Teacher
  • About the show

    Von Braschler, the author of Conversations with the Dream Mentor, was the guest on Tuesday night. "You feel like you're totally awake for the first time; ironically it's when you're asleep," Braschler said about lucid dreaming. He suggested this kind of controlled dreaming could be induced by conscious intent and self hypnosis.

    Becoming lucid or aware that he's dreaming while in the dream state was just a first step for Braschler. Even though he could attain the lucid state, he felt directionless while in it. It was at this point he sought out a dream teacher who could guide him through new experiences. Interestingly, his teacher is a non-physical being who inhabits the dreamscape. To invite a dream mentor into your life, Braschler suggested a meditation where you "visualize a clean white slate," and then use symbolic pictures to convey what you are looking to explore.

    "I've certainly gone to places that aren't of this world," Braschler said of his adventures in the dream world, where there are "realms within realms." In one such journey, he told of visiting "heaven," but it wasn't what one would expect. It was a "frightening place," he said, where angelic beings and overlords were pushing carts in a "kind of enslaved" manner underneath a huge waterfall of light.

    Lucid Dreaming: Reality Check

    A practice Von Braschler has utilized in his work is lucid dreaming. That is the state of consciously being aware that you are dreaming while in a dream, which can be a gateway to all sorts of fascinating experiences. It's a state that one might have spontaneously on occasion, but a bit trickier to have at will. One induction technique developed by pioneering lucid dream researcher, Stephen LaBerge, is to carry out frequent "reality checks" during the day, with the idea that this routine might carry over into your dream behaviors. Here's how this works. A reality check is simply looking at any object that contains text (i.e. sign, letter, book etc.), then looking away for a couple seconds, and then looking back at the text. If the text hasn't changed, you are not dreaming. The interesting thing about this is, in a dream state, text will rarely stay stable, and when you turn away and look back it will have morphed into something else.

    Needless to say, it's a very strange experience when you conduct a reality check in a dream state, and find out you are actually dreaming! Awhile back, when I was on a lucid dreaming kick, I conducted reality checks using a watch with an hourly timer to remind me to do it. Unfortunately, the watch's alarm proved to be a bit of an annoyance in public situations! A more high tech lucid dreaming aid, is the Nova Dreamer, a mask you wear while sleeping. It's able to detect when you go into REM (dream state) and notify your dreaming brain to become aware of this by flashing light signals.

    --Lex

    Bumper Music